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Revolution Was One of Their 3 Rs. Hector Tobar.

by Tobar, Hector; ProQuest Information and Learning Company.
Series: SIRS Enduring Issues 2005Article 47Human Relations. Publisher: Los Angeles Times, 2003ISSN: 1522-3248;.Subject(s): Abduction | Argentina -- History -- Dirty War (1976-1983) | Argentines -- Attitudes | Disappeared persons | Exiles | Generations | Recollection (Psychology)DDC classification: 050 Summary: "At their 30-year reunion, the survivors of the Class of 1973 walked up the stone steps of their old campus and remembered their first day in school, and all the improbable, funny and unbearably tragic things that happened afterward....But most of all, the members of the Class of 1973 celebrated the fact that they had survived at all. Theirs is a generation devastated by the 'dirty war' waged by right-wing death squads and a military junta against 'subversives' in the 1970s and '80s, virtually wiping out the nation's intellectuals and leftist activists." (LOS ANGELES TIMES) This article details how Argentineans remember the kidnappings and disappearances when they were young students during the country's "dirty war" in the 1970s and 1980s.
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REF SIRS 2005 Human Relations Article 47 (Browse shelf) Available

Articles Contained in SIRS Enduring Issues 2005.

Originally Published: Revolution Was One of Their 3 Rs, Dec. 6, 2003; pp. A1+.

"At their 30-year reunion, the survivors of the Class of 1973 walked up the stone steps of their old campus and remembered their first day in school, and all the improbable, funny and unbearably tragic things that happened afterward....But most of all, the members of the Class of 1973 celebrated the fact that they had survived at all. Theirs is a generation devastated by the 'dirty war' waged by right-wing death squads and a military junta against 'subversives' in the 1970s and '80s, virtually wiping out the nation's intellectuals and leftist activists." (LOS ANGELES TIMES) This article details how Argentineans remember the kidnappings and disappearances when they were young students during the country's "dirty war" in the 1970s and 1980s.

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